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A panda cools himself off in a pool of a
zoo in Wuhan, central China's Hubei province June 29, 2008. (Xinhua
file Photo) Photo
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BEIJING, July 28 -- Four giant panda cubs were born within 14
hours at a breeding center, a mini baby boom for the rare animals, in southwest
China's Sichuan Province from Saturday evening to Sunday morning.
The births began Saturday at the Chengdu Panda
Breeding Research Center when 9-year-old Qiyuan, or Magic Luck, gave birth to
female twins at 5:24 pm and 6:16 pm, Xinhua reported, citing center expert Yang
Feifei.
Eight-year-old Chenggong, or Success, gave birth to a
cub at 7:51 pm, followed by 8-year-old Zhuzhu, or Pearl, who delivered at 6:55
am Sunday, Yang said.
The center currently has 71 pandas in captivity,
Xinhua said.
The giant panda is revered as an unofficial national
symbol of China. Only about 1,600 pandas live in the wild, mostly in
southwestern Sichuan province, which was hit by an earthquake in May that killed
nearly 70,000 people.
China's most famous panda preserve, the Wolong Nature
Reserve, was seriously damaged in the quake and forced to relocate most of its
pandas. The preserve is at the heart of China's gargantuan effort to use captive
breeding and artificial insemination to save the giant panda.
(Source: China Daily/Agencies))